Reform approves ‘best budget’ at Durham County Council
The partyβs financial plan for the next four years, which was approved by Durham County Council on Wednesday (February 18), includes a 1.99 per cent council tax rise and Β£12.9 million worth of cuts.Β
Durham County Council will receive about Β£60.5 million from the government over the next three years after an additional funding grant was announced last week.Β
Darren Grimes, Reformβs deputy council leader, said agreeing the budget was a βhistoric momentβ for the party, which has been in power since last Mayβs local elections when it pledged to slash waste and inefficiency.Β Β
He told councillors: βWe have prioritised securing value for money, challenging waste, cancelling vanity projects and virtue signalling, all with a view to limiting the council tax increase as much as possible.β
The councilβs budget says the authority faces a deficit of about Β£9.5 million in the next year and an additional deficit of around Β£42 million for the following three years.
Cllr Grimes, who is also cabinet member for finance, said the budget was prepared against a backdrop of unavoidable inflationary and demand pressures, particularly in statutory social care services, which face a deficit of nearly Β£69 million over the next four years.Β
About Β£264 million worth of schemes for improvements to schools, children’s and adults’ social care, and infrastructure have also been pledged as part of the councilβs new capital programme.Β
βThings are changing in County Durham,β council leader Andrew Husband said.
βWe have reviewed capital spend and aborted projects that were high risk. We will not be borrowing money willy-nilly.β
As part of the budget process, Β£12.9 million worth of cuts and savings are planned over the next year.
Previous funding for town and parish councils has been cut and changes to the Council Tax Support Scheme have been approved, meaning most residents will pay at least 10 per cent of their bills.Β
About Β£3 million worth of savings have been proposed in the neighbourhoods and environment department, including cuts to litter picking and changes to grass cutting schedules. Vacant positions for job roles such as neighbourhood wardens will be removed.Β
In July 2025, Reform councillors voted to scrap the councilβs climate emergency pledge, which aimed to achieve net zero emissions by 2045, and instead voted through a new βCounty Durham Care Emergencyβ motion to prioritise supporting adults and childrenβs services.Β
Cllr Grimes added: βThe changes that we have made, supporting vulnerable adults and children, have been a top priority. We have gone above and beyond to meet those demands and pressures and create new places.Β
βWe have had to make some difficult choices to protect the hard-working council taxpayers of County Durham. Itβs a pledge we made, and itβs a promise we have delivered.Β Β
βThis is a banging budget for a new administration and the residents of County Durham will thank us for our fiscal prudence.β
But Liberal Democrat councillor Amanda Hopgood said the bulk of the councilβs savings, efficiencies, and service changes were already modelled, or being modelled, by the previous Joint Administration in charge of the authority.Β
She added: βThis year, financially speaking, was the equivalent of a ten-pin bowling match with the bumpers up. The real test comes when settlements tighten, pressures grow, and there isnβt millions of pounds of headroom cushioning the landing.β
Councillor Richard Bell, a Conservative former cabinet member, said Reform has been fortunate due to several funding windfalls from the government and disagreed with the financial planning.Β
He added: βOn balance, a lucky budget but not a wise one.β
Paul Darby, corporate director of resources, said he was satisfied the council has enough cash reserves for the future but warned that delivering future savings will mean βdifficult decisionsβ will need to be made in the coming years.Β
Councillor Chris Lines, speaking on behalf of the Independent group, warned of financial challenges ahead. βDecisions are being made now that appear to be very short-sighted and will create what could be insurmountable financial challenges for this council in a few short years,β he said.Β
The member for Sedgefield added: βDespite the luxury of receiving a three-year settlement, the current administration now appears to be pursuing ideology over fiscal responsibility or fairness to try and score a PR point, while at the same time cutting services and reducing support for the poorest residents.β
Councillor Rob Crute, Labour leader, said the council finds itself with an βembarrassment of richesβ due to the latest funding settlementΒ
He added: βThe people who elected us to serve them deserve better than council tax increases, higher fees and charges, further cuts to services, increased borrowing, and breaches of promises made to the electors less than a year ago, especially when this council has been handed a lifeline in the form of a significant increase in funding for the first time in a generation.Β
βThis isnβt what the people wanted, what they expected, and certainly isnβt what they voted for last May.β
But Cllr Husband said the council is investing in County Durham.Β
Concluding the debate, he added: βA massive amount of effort has gone into this budget from the Reform administration and officers who have helped us to produce the best budget this council has seen over the last 15 years
βQualified by the fact that we have seen five per cent [council tax rises] in the last three years from the former administration.”